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. 1972 Feb;126(3):617–626. doi: 10.1042/bj1260617

Glycogen synthetase and the control of glycogen synthesis in the cellular slime mould Dictyostelium discoideum during the growth (myxamoebal) phase

G Weeks 1, J M Ashworth 1
PMCID: PMC1178419  PMID: 4672670

Abstract

1. Myxamoebae of the cellular slime mould Dictyostelium discoideum Ax-2 that are grown in axenic medium containing 86mm-glucose have seven times the glycogen content of the same myxamoebae grown in the same medium but lacking added carbohydrate. 2. During the transition from the exponential to the stationary phase of growth in axenic medium containing glucose myxamoebae preferentially synthesize glycogen and can have as much as three times the glycogen content during the stationary phase as they have during the exponential phase of growth. 3. The rate of glycogen degradation by myxamoebae is, under all conditions of growth, small compared with the rate of glycogen accumulation and the changes in glycogen content thus reflect altered rates of glycogen synthesis. 4. There is no correlation between the rate of glycogen synthesis by myxamoebae and the glycogen synthetase content of the myxamoebae. 5. The activity of glycogen synthetase of D. discoideum is inhibited by a physiological concentration of ATP and this inhibition is overcome by glucose 6-phosphate. Both effects are especially marked at physiological concentrations of UDP-glucose. 6. The rate of glycogen accumulation by myxamoebae growing exponentially in axenic media can be satisfactorily accounted for in terms of the known intracellular concentrations of glucose 6-phosphate, UDP-glucose and glycogen synthetase. The rate-limiting factors controlling glycogen synthesis by the myxamoebae are apparently the substrate (UDP-glucose) and effector (glucose 6-phosphate and ATP) concentrations rather than the amount of the enzyme.

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Selected References

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